Racial gap in cancer deaths as wide as in 1981

February 18, 2009 · Print This Article <javascript:window.print()>

Liz Szabo, USA Today

- Blacks are more likely to develop cancer and die from the disease than any
other group, according to a report released today. Black patients also live
a shorter time after diagnosis than others.

Death rates have fallen in recent decades for all groups, and the gap
between the races has fluctuated over the years. Yet the gap between blacks
and whites is just as wide today as it was in 1981, report co-author Ahmedin
Jemal says.

Among women, for example, death rates were 14% higher for blacks than whites
in 1981. Today, those rates are 16% higher. Death rates are 33% higher among
black men than whites, a difference that is almost unchanged since 1981.

Click here for 
more…<http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2009-02-17-cancer-deaths-race_N.htm>
-- 
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control, and at times hard to handle, but if you can't handle me at my
worst, then you sure as hell don't deserve me at my best." ~Marilyn Monroe

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